ENG:
Anna Di Carlo is the leader of the Marxist-Leninist Party of Canada, elected on August 16, 2008 by the Party's 8th Congress. Besides the duties required of the national leader by the Canada Elections Act, Anna is the official spokesperson of the MLPC and is responsible for developing the public relations office of the MLPC, issuing communiques, responding to media inquiries, being available as a resource person, and carrying out a public educational program on matters related to the Canada Elections Act, theories of governance and related issues.
Anna has been a member of the Marxist-Leninist Party of Canada since 1978. As a student at the University of Guelph she joined the Party through its work against the violation of political rights and against state-organized racist ...

﻿
We are pleased to announce that our party’s candidate for the electoral district of Sault Ste. Marie will once again be Mike Taffarel.Mike Taffarel, now retired from Essar Steel Algoma, will be filing his nomination papers at the local Elections Canada office within the next few days.*************************Canada needs an anti-war government - vote Marxist-Leninist!In this election, the Marxist-Leninist Party of Canada will field about 70 candidates.With the addition of several more youth candidates, this is up from 59 in the 2008 election.The MLPC calls on Canadians to ...

The Marxist-Leninist party’s vision of Canada is one where all people are able to decide what kind of society they want to live in. They could decide the direction of the economy and participate in the democratic process so as to exercise control over their lives. Today, this is not possible. We have a cartel party system that actually deprives the people of their ability to decide things.
Our issue of concern
Because of the current political set-up, it doesn’t matter which vision the MLPC or any other organizations or individuals have. The agendas and visions that prevail are ...

Questions remain after Prentice grounds Alberta’s fleetAlberta’s taxpayer-funded fleet will be grounded by early December, a government source says, but it may be much longer before the actual costs of the move are known. The decision to scrap Alberta’s controversial taxpayer-funded fleet came on Sept. 16, shortly after Jim Prentice was sworn in as premier. Since then, the fleet hasn’t been used by government ministers, only civil servants under a revised approval process.

Wildrose caucus changes party's course on minority group rightsThe 16-member Wildrose caucus released a “binding statement” in support of equality rights for specific minority groups after the party’s membership rejected a similar policy proposal at its annual meeting earlier this month. In the statement released Monday, the caucus declared its support for the values enshrined in the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms and the Alberta Human Rights Act.